Headless chickens

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Welcome to your friendly neighborhood disjointed post.

I’m starting to have papers and projects due for school so things have started feeling a bit more frantic. Ok, a lot more frantic.

Anyway, the Boyfriend’s family is in town visiting so we went out for brunch today. His Seest is just learning how to use her dSLR so I brought mine along too and we played around with them. It was fun having someone to experiment with and not feel too self-conscious, especially when we hunched over things for several minutes, fiddling with settings as everyone else twiddled their thumbs.

Anddd now I have to go dig through my closet to try to put together an outfit for an event tomorrow. Boyfriend is having his white coat ceremony for dental school. Super exciting! Except business casual just doesn’t really work with my wardrobe.

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PS: In other news, my Chelsea collar knockoff dress was entered in Erin’s Copy Cat Challenge over at I heart fabric! Feel free to check it out and enter any of your own copycat projects!

When to break up with a project?

Beaded collar progress

Beaded collar progress

Beaded collar progress

Beaded collar progress

Beaded collar progress

Sometimes I’ll be working on a project and I just won’t be feeling it.

A number of things can be going on. Sometimes the pattern pieces just aren’t fitting together right and the whole thing looks silly and unsalvageable. Other times I look at it and wonder if I’ll ever wear/use it. Or maybe I had an idea in my head that just isn’t translating. Sometimes all you need is to step away for a day or two and come back with fresh eyes. Other times stepping away only leads to lack of motivation and your project ends up in a dusty “Someday” box.

We’re all taught the importance of perseverance and finishing what you start, but there comes a point when you’re just wasting your time. When do you decide to call it quits and move on to something else?

I’m having trouble with this collar. I think I made it too big, or the pearls are too big, and I’m doubting whether I’ll ever wear it because it looks slightly wonky, which makes me not want to put in the time to finish it.

But it does look pretty cool so far and I do feel like I’m kind of pre-judging it before seeing the final effect. Plus, I’ve seen a ton of gorgeous beaded collars on Pinterest and I’m sure they looked at least a tiny bit wonky before they were finished.

Hmmm.

How do you decide whether to give up or keep going?

Chelsea collars and wearing things in public

Chelsea collar dress

Chelsea collar dress

Chelsea collar dress

Chelsea collar dress
dress: self-made // tights: Modcloth // shoes: Seychelles

This dress makes me super happy. It’s a replica of this one (why is making replicas so much fun? and why am I so obsessed with Dear Creatures???) and I made it entirely without a pattern, which I’m pretty rusty at, which is why it’s sort of wrinkly in a few places. I’m choosing to ignore them.

I used to pretty much only make costume replicas from historical or fantasy films (mostly Lord of the Rings, Pirates of the Caribbean, and Star Wars with some Lemony Snicket and Stardust thrown in) but it was kind of a bummer because I had these gorgeous dresses that I pretty much never wore, except to the occasional ren faire or Comic-Con. Although there was one occasion where my best friend and I walked to the grocery store dressed as Arwen and Padme. No one stared at all. Not a one.

Anyway, the point is this was a fun project. And I’ve already worn it out once! (There was no staring.)

*Note to self: learn to focus properly, kthx.

Kale shrimp salad

Kale shrimp salad

I used to really hate kale. The only way I’d ever eaten it was steamed with a little bit of soy sauce, which just ends up tasting like a mushy mouthful of watery soy sauce and leaves. Not fun, especially for a kid.

But it is really healthy for you, so once in a while I would disdainfully buy a bunch and take it home to blend into smoothies with lots of bananas and mangos and other fruits to disguise the flavor.

Then a few years ago my friend introduced me to kale chips and I was floored. So delicious! Just toss them in a bag with olive oil and some kind of vinegar and bake until crispy. And they taste like french fries! And then over break I was experimenting with putting kale in soup and it turns out that’s delicious too! The kale gets all soft and silky but still keeps its structure. Super noms!

And then my sister and I were starving at Whole Foods one day and decided to grab lunch at the salad bar. Holy crap guys. Most delicious healthy meal out ever. We immediately went home and tried recreating some of our favorites.

Earlier this week I had a craving for a kale salad and happened to have some leftover raita from an Indian restaurant I’d gone to, so I decided to add that. So delish I can’t even. Anyway, this is my modified version that I made after I ran out of raita. And I’m 99% positive this is at least 99% clean.

Clean kale shrimp salad

Ingredients:

  • 1/2 bunch kale, leaf only, washed and ripped into bite sized pieces
  • 1 roma tomato
  • 1/2 red onion
  • lemon juice (I use one of those lemon squeezer thingies)
  • olive oil
  • shrimp (I get the frozen cooked tail off kind from Costco)
  • apple cider vinegar (best kind is Bragg’s, with the mother)
  • 2 tbsp nonfat plain Greek yogurt

Put the kale in a ziploc bag and drizzle 1-2 tablespoons of olive oil and about 1 tablespoon of lemon juice. Close the ziploc bag and massage the kale around so all of the leaves are well coated. Kale is really tough but becomes more tender as it’s massaged so you’ll want to do this for a few minutes. Add more olive oil and lemon juice as needed.

Meanwhile, defrost your shrimp (I usually add about 5-8 shrimp per serving) by putting it in a small bowl, covering with water, and microwaving for one minute.

In a separate tupperware, add the chopped tomato and thinly sliced onion. Add 1-2 tablespoons olive oil, 1-2 tablespoons apple cider vinegar, and a pinch of salt. Shake well and let it sit in the fridge for at least half an hour for the flavors to mingle.

For the dressing just mix 1-2 tablespoons of Greek yogurt with lemon juice, consistency based on preference.

Serves 2.

Since grad school can get busy and I eat six meals a day*, I like to do a lot of cooking and food prep once or twice a week so I always have food ready. This is a great recipe for that because I can have one container of prepared kale, one with the tomato/onion mixture, and a separate one of pre-made dressing. It makes making dinner  super easy!

If you’re skeptical, go to Whole Foods and try one of their kale salads. It’s life-altering. Unless you inherently hate salad, in which case I really don’t recommend trying this. :]

Kale shrimp salad

*No, I don’t cook six times a day, and yes they are each smaller meals. I just hate that feeling of eating a ton and feeling bloated and crappy for a few hours and then suddenly being starving and then repeating the cycle. My metabolism has also gotten waaaay faster since I started doing this!

On perfect fabrics falling out of the sky (not literally)

Sometimes I’ll have a project in mind and will search high and low and not be able to find the right fabric for it. When I was making my Betty Draper dress for the Mad Men party I went to, I literally spent hours perusing eBay and fabric.com and went to the fabric store twice before giving up and picking a different dress to replicate. (I had originally wanted to do this one but ended up going with this one instead.)

Then there are times like this past week when perfect fabrics fall into your lap and beg to be taken home.

Fabric finds

A few days ago I went thrifting on a whim looking for spice jars and possibly some DIY-able men’s shirts. There was nothing remotely resembling a spice jar and I was completely distracted by shoes and forgot to look at men’s shirts, but I did stumble across a three yard hunk of gorgeous pink/taupe silky satiny fabric mixed in with the sheets and bedding. Here’s the extra-awesome part: a few months ago I was wandering aimlessly around the fabric store looking for exactly that fabric! Except the only thing remotely similar was 100% silk and about $290384 per yard (not an exact estimate). I ended up leaving with a satin that was too heavy and didn’t drape right and abandoned that project. Did I mention the thrift store charged me exactly $1.99 for that three yard piece??

The next day I stopped by the fabric store on the way to school to get some thread and decided it couldn’t hurt to just glance around. My bank account winced and I thought maybe just one tiny chunk of fabric couldn’t hurt. And then I found the same fabric I had found at the thrift store, in exactly the shade of navy I had needed to go with the taupey pink! *happy dance*

Double breasted peter pan

While I was at the fabric store, I had also wanted to look around for a navy cotton, something on the thicker side but still with drape. I was about to walk out of there with something not so amazing when the perfect fabric basically jumped out at me. I don’t even know what this fabric would be called so I couldn’t really ask for what I was looking for. I’m still amazed!

Anyway, sometimes it’s nice when the universe balances out the times when you just can’t for the life of you find what you’re looking for.

Yellow floral fabric

In other news, I’ve got some more exciting projects lined up this weekend. I bought a yellow floraly fabric a few weeks ago and I couldn’t decide what I wanted to do with it but I’m thinking of going with this pattern. I might add some sort of cute collar detail but I haven’t decided.

I have to say though, it’s a little depressing making summer dresses and not being able to wear them immediately. I feel like this yellow print is a little too sunshiney to be able to wear in the snow. I’ll have to experiment.

Literally all of yesterday I was sucked into this project and holy crap it’s been difficult! I’ve had absolutely no training in pattern drafting and I wouldn’t even know where to begin to do it the “right” way. I’ve tried the math thing and somehow my calculations always seem to be off (one time I swear I did all the math right and ended up with a waist line 14″ too wide). I’ve tried using my mannequin but it’s a cheapy one and we have entirely different body types (plus her boobs are oddly pointy –maybe she needs a bra?). I’ve even tried tracing existing garments, which usually works best (except for the time I stupidly used a knit dress to make a pattern for a cotton dress and didn’t account for the lack of stretch -headdesk-). Usually I’m able to cobble together something decent but I couldn’t begin to tell you how I did it.

Chelsea collar dress

Anyhoo, the point is I’m 99% done and it 99% fits! I just need to hem it and fray check the buttonholes and it’ll be good to go! Look for it on the blog on Monday ;]

Lastly, can I just say how much in love I am with my new camera? My one piece of advice for camera noobs is to go touch one. No joke. If I had actually gone to a store and picked up and played with each of the cameras I was looking into getting, I’m fairly certain I would have gone home with this one in the first place. (Although to be fair, the only reason I could afford this one now is because the d7100 just came out so prices on used d7000 dropped dramatically. But still! Touch all the cameras!)

d7000!

And yes, I  do feel slightly blasphemous taking crappy picture of a d7000 with an iPhone.

Have a great weekend!

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